Toyota FX-1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The FX-1 is a concept car by Toyota. It was first shown at the 1983 Tokyo Motor Show and also shown at the Geneva Motor Show in March 1984. It was a showcase for new technologies in driver controls, engine, suspension, materials and aerodynamics.

Colour CRTs were used in the dash to display speed, rpm, fuel, temperature, etc.

Engine and driveline

It used an enhanced prototype form of the 1G-GEU engine called the LASREα-X, a 1,988 cc EFI twin cam 24-valve inline six engine equipped with dual turbo-chargers and intercooler, computer-controlled valve timing, variable displacement and induction.[1] At low speeds, the variable displacement system shut down half the engine to conserve fuel. The system never went into production[2][3] but a simplified version later appeared as the 1G-GTE, slightly modified for production and without the variable cam timing and variable displacement. In search of reducing maintenance, the FX-1's engine also featured computer-controlled distributorless ignition.[4]

Transmission was via a four-speed automatic ECT (Electronically Controlled Transmission) with overdrive.

Suspension

It used a pneumatic suspension combined with TEMS electronic damping control. The pneumatic suspension automatically raised and lowered the front and rear of the car separately for maximum stability. TEMS was also used on the Supra and the Soarer (2 stage) and on the highest spec Crown (3 stage).

Materials

Many exotic materials were used, including Fibre Reinforced Metal (body panels) and Shape Memory Effect Alloy (body panels) and Ceramics (brake rotors).

Aerodynamics

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI